27 October 2005 Edition

The 5th Column

U2, the IRA and Baldy Barry

At least one Irish TV broadcaster and some radio stations did some swift
re-edits of their news scripts to leave out some excerpts that they had
aired earlier from the homecoming news conference of Guardian Journalist
Rory Carroll, kidnapped by anti-occupation forces in Iraq.

The Dubliner and former news scribe for the Irish News in Belfast was keen
that his abductors didn't mistake him for a Briton. He drew a map of Europe,
illustrating the gulf between Ireland and Britain with an exaggeratedly wide
Irish Sea. And to make sure they knew he was from the Emerald Isle rather
than the land of John Bull, Rory rattled off a string of Irish associations,
including U2 and the IRA! He was so desperate that he even quoted the RTÉ TV
soap, Fair City, in the hope that his Arab captors would readily recognise
the fictional Dublin suburb of Carrigstown and characters like gossip Eunice
Phelan, work-shy son Christy Phelan, one-time teacher 'Baldy Barry' who
seduced one of his school pupils, and moany Charlie Kelly.

To think that a man's life can hang by the very thin thread of a man with a
gun in Baghdad's Sadr City being a fan of Fair City: the whole episode sends
shivers up your spine.

Paisley's in the Privy

Ian Paisley is in the Privy but it's not the toilet: it's the Privy Council.

The Privy Council officially advises Queen Elizabrit but is largely
ceremonial and has not met in full for 50 years. Appointment is for life,
but only Ministers of State participate in its policy work.

Papa Doc is entitled to the status as the leader of the fourth largest
political party in Westminster. And the big man has been complaining that
it's well overdue. "It's only deliberate discrimination against the
Democratic Unionist Party that kept it coming for such a long time."

And the DUP knows all about discrimination.

Bully Buller

MI5 boss Eliza Manningham-Buller appears to turn a blind eye to torture
techniques employed by allies to extract information from suspects. And so
does her overseas chums in the James Bond brigade over at MI6.

Dear Eliza admitted as much in a court statement to Britain's law lords but
leaked to Channel 4 News.

Britain's spy mistress takes the approach of "Don't ask, don't tell," about
'friendly' states' interrogators if they put electrodes on your sensitive
bits, near drown you in a bath of freezing water, hang you by your finger
tips, or abuse and rape you and/or your relatives.

Referring to the case of one prisoner in the hands of the Algerian Secret
Service, Bully Buller says: "No inquiries were made of Algerian liaison
about the precise circumstances that attended their questioning."

MI5 and MI6 just don't want to know.

Shami Chakrabarti, director of Britain's human rights group, Liberty, said:
"As in the past, Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller is brutally honest about the
murky and dubious world of secret intelligence. However, it is one thing to
recognise that some of our so-called allies torture people and quite another
to legitimise that practice through our court system."

Weapon dump

The Sainsbury's supermarket chain's new slogan is, "Try something new
today," and if you're using the toilets in their Hitchin, Hertfordshire,
branch you might find something a little above the bog standard — a Ministry
of Defence Sig Sauer 9mm automatic pistol.

An MoD "worker" apparently "mislaid" the piece in the pissoir while doing
their business, although why our pistolero felt the need to be armed and
dangerous in a supermarket lavvy hasn't been explained by worried military
minds.

Shopping schoolkids

Asda's parent company, Wal-Mart, is ever vigilant and keen to play its part
in 'The War Against Terror'.

A schoolkid in North Carolina, working on a photographic project to
illustrate the liberties that Americans enjoy under the Bill of Rights in
'The Land of the Free', took a photo of himself standing beside a poster of
George Bush, giving him the "thumbs down". He then put the film into
Wal-Mart's for developing, who then promptly informed the police. Suspecting
subversion, the FBI swooped on the school, confiscated the offending
photograph, grilled the teacher, and then had a few patriotic words with the
boy.

Shop naked

Housman's Bookshop, London's oldest radical bookshop and stockists of An
Phoblacht, is celebrating its 60th birthday.

Since 1945, Housman's has been selling books and magazines covering
politics, peace studies, current affairs, as well as fiction and all sorts.

One of the eye-catching highlights of a packed series of events is 'Naked
Shopping Night at Housman's' on Wednesday 22 November .

The hospitable Housman's team urges browsers: "Throw off those sweaters,
leave the thermal tights at home, and join us for a relaxed evening of bare
book shopping and socialising to celebrate both the publication of Bare
Britain and the success of this year's World Naked Bike Ride. Localised
'blowers' and warming 'cups' (optional) will help keep off the winter chill.

So if any London-based radical fancies zipping along to pick up An Phoblacht
and a 'blower', Housman's is at 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 9DX (telephone
020 7837 4473; [email protected], www.housmans.com), across the road from
King's Cross Thameslink Rail Station.

The 5th Column hopes to be there, but don't expect a report back because
I'll have nowhere to stick my pencil.

An Phoblacht Magazine

AN PHOBLACHT MAGAZINE:

The first edition of this new magazine will feature a 10 page special on the life and legacy of our leader Martin McGuinness to mark the first anniversary of his untimely passing.

It will include a personal reminiscence by Gerry Adams and contributions from the McGuinness family.

There will also be an exclusive interview with our new Uachtarán Mary Lou McDonald.